Baxter Healthcare Corp., Cross-Appellee v. Healthdyne, Inc., Cross-Appellant

944 F.2d 1573, 34 Fed. R. Serv. 557, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 24836, 1991 WL 197369
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 22, 1991
Docket90-8370
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 944 F.2d 1573 (Baxter Healthcare Corp., Cross-Appellee v. Healthdyne, Inc., Cross-Appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baxter Healthcare Corp., Cross-Appellee v. Healthdyne, Inc., Cross-Appellant, 944 F.2d 1573, 34 Fed. R. Serv. 557, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 24836, 1991 WL 197369 (11th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

GODBOLD, Senior Circuit Judge.

Baxter, known throughout this case as Travenol, is primarily engaged in the sale of disposable hospital products including distilled water. It desired to obtain and to market a humidifier system that would warm and humidify the air breathed by hospitalized patients with impaired breathing capabilities who were connected to respiratory therapy systems. The humidifier would be composed of a disposable canister in which liquid would be vaporized, an electronic controller that contained a heat exchanger to transfer heat to the canister, temperature controls, and a system to automatically control the flow of liquid into the canister. Travenol desired to supply the canister to the humidifying system and to obtain the other components in a unit to be supplied by a vendor. It expected that the unit would utilize disposable canisters and distilled water to be supplied by Travenol within its historic function as a supplier of disposable medical products.

In 1980 Travenol entered into a written contract with Healthdyne for it to develop and manufacture the controller unit. Tra-venol supplied specifications that covered the nature and functions of the unit, performance standards, and, in a general sense, its design. As a more specific design was developed within the general scope, and testing was conducted, and manufacturing began, both parties were involved in numerous ways. Changes and modifications were made by each party and shortcomings identified and corrected. Testing was done by both parties. Some safety tests that the contract provided were to be made by Healthdyne were, with the consent of both parties, made by Tra-venol, and Travenol conducted other tests *1575 on its own. As the trial judge later described it, Travenol’s participation in the product was “continuous” and “pervasive.” One of the matters discussed was protecting against an overflow of liquid into the canister that might result in excess moisture being passed on into the lungs of the breather/patient. A part of this matter concerned whether, since the controller was electronically operated, it might overfill as a consequence of a momentary loss or diminution of electric power (“brownout”), or a power surge. There was dialogue between the parties concerning whether the specifications supplied by Tra-venol properly addressed operation in conditions of momentary power problems. Eventually the matter of overfill as a consequence of electrical power incidents became central to this case.

Beginning around 1983 Travenol ordered from Healthdyne and placed with its customers a total of approximately 1,750 units. Travenol described at trial difficulties with, and shortcomings of, the units, and customer complaints and dissatisfaction. There was an abnormally high rate of customer returns for repairs, involving numerous defects — examples included alarms malfunctioning, fuses burning out, loose screws, failures of power, clamps not functioning properly, loose and badly insulated wires and wires not soldered, parts missing. Some of these faults were common to more than one unit, others not. A Travenol official described these failures, however, as “nuisance failures.”

As early as 1982 Travenol had begun negotiations with Sharp, another manufacturer, to produce a “second generation” controller. There was evidence that this search for a new source began with dissatisfaction with the quality of the Health-dyne unit, other evidence that Travenol was disenchanted with Healthdyne price increases and was seeking a unit that cost less.

In May 1985 Travenol became aware of a new problem that affected patient safety. It received a report of a life-threatening incident in Chicago, involving an infant user whose lungs filled with liquid, causing the child to go into cardiac arrest. Traven-ol’s investigation led it to conclude that the unit might overfill during a momentary “brown-out”, or power surge, causing liquid to pass into the user’s lungs. Because of this risk involving patient safety Traven-ol concluded that it must retrofit all units to cure the overfill problem.

Travenol and Healthdyne discussed mechanical means, and alternatively software means, that would fix the possibility of overfill. Travenol itself designed a modification that its designer described as “repeatable in manufacturing and ... reliably accurate in functionality over the remainder of the product life.” The parties developed suggested costs of proposed mechanical alternatives. Travenol made a decision that it would not recall the units but would “modify” or fix them. It sent its customers a notice, telling of the possibility of overfilling during power outages and stating that instructions would be sent for returning units for retrofitting to cure this problem. The notice gave instructions on safety procedures to be followed pending retrofitting. It made no reference to any other problem. When this notice was sent the warranty period on approximately one-third of the units had expired. Travenol notified the Food and Drug Administration of the problem and told FDA it would “fix the unit.” While these events were going on Travenol was talking with Sharp about its manufacturing controller units. On May 30, 1985, the same day Travenol notified FDA it would retrofit the Healthdyne units, it was in correspondence with Sharp in Japan inquiring how quickly it could manufacture units and in what volume.

Travenol called on Healthdyne to be responsible for retrofitting costs. It wrote to Healthdyne:

The manufacturing phase of the program has continually been plagued by poor workmanship, slow turnaround in serviced units, and a lack of repair parts. It is now time for Healthdyne to step up and accept their responsibility to implement quickly and accept the cost of the rework. It will be significantly less costly for Healthdyne to perform the rework *1576 on their own as opposed to Travenol doing the work and recovering the cost from Healthdyne. This issue must be resolved quickly so that we may advise our HLC 37 users as to how and where to send units for rework. Please respond at the earliest possible date.

Healthdyne refused. Travenol made arrangements with Sharp for new units that contained many of the same features as the Healthdyne units. 1 Some Healthdyne units were retrofitted pursuant to the notice sent out by Travenol. Ultimately Travenol took all of them back and replaced all with Sharp units.

Travenol sued Healthdyne asserting breach of contract and implied warranty. It claimed damages consisting of research and development payments that under the contract it had paid to Healthdyne, full repayment of the purchase price for all units, and costs it incurred pursuant to its notice to customers. Healthdyne counterclaimed seeking $45,757 unpaid expenses relating to manufacture of the controller, unpaid invoices for parts and equipment relating to the controller of $35,908.81, and unpaid invoices for miscellaneous parts and equipment not related to the controller of $23,140.87.

At trial Healthdyne moved for a directed verdict. The trial judge ruled:

I now rule that I will not give to the jury anything other than common law contract, because I now make the finding that Travenol’s — plaintiff’s participation in this product was so continuous and so pervasive that it puts it out of the context for the U.C.C.

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Bluebook (online)
944 F.2d 1573, 34 Fed. R. Serv. 557, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 24836, 1991 WL 197369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baxter-healthcare-corp-cross-appellee-v-healthdyne-inc-ca11-1991.